You've called customer service six times. You've been transferred, disconnected, and given contradicting information. The billing error persists, or the service failure continues, and normal channels have failed. It's time to escalate — and arbitration is the most powerful tool consumers have against Comcast/Xfinity.
Here's the counterintuitive truth: the arbitration clause that Comcast put in your contract to prevent class action lawsuits actually works in your favor for individual disputes. Comcast must pay hundreds or thousands in arbitration fees regardless of the outcome, making settlement of your $200-$2,000 dispute cheaper than fighting it.
Why Arbitration Works in Your Favor
Comcast's subscriber agreement requires disputes to go through arbitration instead of court. This sounds bad for consumers, but for individual claims:
- Comcast pays the arbitration fees (except your $200 filing fee for AAA)
- Legal costs add up fast for Comcast — they need lawyers for each case
- It's cheaper for them to settle than to pay an attorney $500/hour to dispute your $300 claim
- The arbitration process is simple — no lawyer needed on your side
- You can recover more than actual damages — arbitrator can award reasonable costs
Before Filing: The Required Pre-Arbitration Steps
Comcast's agreement requires you to attempt resolution before arbitration:
Step 1: Contact Customer Service (and Document)
Call or chat Comcast support about your issue. Document:
- Date and time of each contact
- Representative name or ID
- What was promised vs. what happened
- Reference/ticket numbers
Step 2: Send a Written Notice of Dispute
Mail a formal notice to:
Comcast Attn: Notice of Dispute 1701 JFK Boulevard Philadelphia, PA 19103
Include:
- Your account number
- Description of the dispute
- Amount you're claiming
- What resolution you want
- Statement that you'll file for arbitration if not resolved in 60 days
Step 3: Wait 60 Days
Comcast's agreement gives them 60 days to resolve after receiving your notice. Many disputes settle at this stage — the notice of dispute alone signals you're serious.
How to File for AAA Arbitration
If 60 days pass without resolution:
Step 1: Go to adr.org (American Arbitration Association)
- Select "File a Case" > "Consumer Arbitration"
- Download the Consumer Demand for Arbitration form
Step 2: Fill Out the Demand Form
- Claimant: Your name and address
- Respondent: Comcast Cable Communications, LLC, 1701 JFK Blvd, Philadelphia PA 19103
- Nature of Dispute: Detailed description of the issue
- Claim Amount: Dollar amount you're seeking
- Relief Sought: Refund, credit, damages, arbitration costs
Step 3: Attach Supporting Documents
- Copies of bills showing errors
- Chat/email transcripts with customer service
- Your Notice of Dispute and proof of mailing
- Screenshots of advertised vs. actual service (speed tests, etc.)
- Timeline of the dispute
Step 4: Pay the Filing Fee
- Claims under $10,000: $200 filing fee
- Comcast pays the remaining arbitration administration costs
Step 5: Submit
- Mail or upload your completed demand + documents to AAA
- AAA notifies Comcast and assigns a case number
What Happens After Filing
- AAA contacts Comcast (they have 14 days to respond)
- Comcast's legal team reviews — this is often when settlement offers come
- Arbitrator selection — both parties can strike names from a list
- Pre-hearing conference (if needed)
- Hearing — usually by phone or documents only for small claims
- Award — arbitrator issues a binding decision
Types of Claims That Win in Arbitration
- Billing errors Comcast refuses to correct
- Promotional pricing not honored (promised one rate, billed another)
- Service not matching advertised speeds (consistent underperformance)
- Equipment charges for items you returned (with proof)
- Unauthorized plan changes or add-ons
- Early termination fees when Comcast breached the contract first
- Service outages without appropriate credits
How to Maximize Your Settlement
- Be specific about damages: Calculate exact dollar amounts owed
- Request more than minimum: Include time spent resolving the issue, additional costs incurred
- Document everything: Organized evidence wins cases
- Stay professional: Arbitrators respond to clear, factual presentations
- Mention the FCC and state AG complaints you've filed (file these simultaneously for pressure)
Quick Checklist
- [ ] Documented all customer service contacts (dates, names, promises)
- [ ] Sent written Notice of Dispute to Comcast Philadelphia address
- [ ] Waited 60 days for response
- [ ] Downloaded AAA Consumer Demand form from adr.org
- [ ] Completed form with specific claim amount and relief sought
- [ ] Attached all supporting evidence
- [ ] Paid $200 filing fee
- [ ] Filed simultaneously with FCC and state attorney general (optional but adds pressure)
Bottom Line
Arbitration against Comcast/Xfinity is designed to be accessible to individuals without lawyers. The economics favor consumers: Comcast's cost to participate in arbitration typically exceeds the individual claim amount, making settlement the rational choice. If normal customer service channels have failed you, arbitration is the escalation path that consistently produces results.
Sources
- AAA Consumer Arbitration Rules: https://www.adr.org/consumer
- Comcast Subscriber Agreement: https://www.xfinity.com/corporate/customers/policies/subscriberagreement
- FCC Consumer Complaint Center: https://consumercomplaints.fcc.gov/






